Miami Heat vs. Toronto Raptors Game 7 Recap: Blood, Sweat, and Tears

(Toronto, ON) — Game 7, Eastern Conference semifinals, and a hungry Cleveland Cavaliers team waiting for you in the shadows, the Miami Heat gave its blood, sweat and tears in this best-of-seven series.

Although the Heat lost 116-89 at the end of the day, Miami was without its two biggest stars in Chris Bosh and Hassan Whiteside for a majority of the playoffs.

“Hopefully, going forward this organization is not snakebitten like we’ve been the last two years, losing key players,” Dwyane Wade said afterwards.

All in all, the season should have been considered a success for a bruised and battered Heat team that many considered would have no shot of reaching the NBA Eastern Conference finals without its main two big men.

However, the Heat fought, battled, and willed its way to a Game 7 and you have to commend them for their effort.

Wade, who carried this Heat team throughout the playoffs, also had this to say after the game:

“We fought tooth and nail to try to get to that goal of getting to the Eastern Conference Finals,” Wade said. “We came up obviously one game short of that. For myself and a lot of guys on this team, there’s not always mother season, another season, so you want to take advantage of the opportunities.”

Wade finished the night with 16 points, four rebounds, and three assist as his backcourt mate Goran Dragic ended with 16 points, six rebounds, seven assists, and two steals.

For the Raptors, point guard Kyle Lowry showed up in a big way as he finished with 35 points, seven rebounds, nine assists, and four steals.

“Their most aggressive, most energetic burst was at the beginning of that fourth quarter and they put it away,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. “They wore us down.”

The Heat now prepare for an offseason where its number one objective is going to be retaining emerging center Hassan Whiteside.

About Bradford J. Ahn

Brad has been a Heat fan since the J. Will days in 2005. Passionate about the game of basketball since the days of Space Jam and Kazaam, Brad has been blogging about the NBA since 2006 and is a walking basketball encyclopedia. He is proud to be one of the lead staff writers on Heat Nation. Follow him on Twitter @mrbradahn.